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One of Hoboken's best known landmarks, it was first excavated around 1832 by Hoboken's founder, Col. John Stevens III, and adorned with a gothic-style stone arch. Named after the ancient Greco-Roman prophetesses, it was originally Hoboken's biggest tourist attraction, for the magnesium-laced water that flows from the spring. [25]
This service operates from the Hoboken Terminal in Hoboken, New Jersey, by way of the Downtown Hudson Tubes to the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan, New York. [1] The 3-mile (4.8 km) trip takes 11 minutes to complete, and is the shortest route in the PATH system.
Hoboken: part of the Hoboken Firehouses and Firemen's Monument TR 10: Engine Company No. 3: Engine Company No. 3: March 30, 1984 : 201 Jefferson St. Hoboken: part of the Hoboken Firehouses and Firemen's Monument TR 11: Engine Company No. 4
The Union water sphere is described on the list as "The World's Largest Water Tower." The 212-foot-tall sphere has towered over the Garden State Parkway and Routes 22 and 82 since 1964.
The Hoboken-33rd Street service originated as the Hoboken–19th Street service operated by the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad (H&M) on February 26, 1908. [4] The first of what would become the four lines of the H&M/PATH service, it operated from Hoboken Terminal and ran through the Uptown Hudson Tubes, but ran only as far north as 19th Street in Manhattan. [5]
A list compiled of the nation's largest roadside attractions by BatchGeo, a mapping software, has two New Jersey locations on it. Across 41 states, the website composed the "Largest Map of the ...
The Exchange Place station is a station on the Port Authority Trans–Hudson (PATH) rail system in the Paulus Hook neighborhood of Jersey City, Hudson County, New Jersey.The station is on the Newark–World Trade Center line between Newark Penn Station and World Trade Center all week and the Hoboken–World Trade Center line during the day on weekdays to service Hoboken Terminal.
To date, completed segments in Hoboken and the new parks and renovated piers that abut them are at Hoboken Terminal, Pier A, the promenade and bike path from Newark to 5th Streets, Frank Sinatra Park, Castle Point Park, Sinatra Drive to 12th to 14th Streets, New York Waterway Pier, 14th Street Pier, and 14th Street north to southern side of ...